TripPick France France

Paris in 7 Days — City Plus Multiple Day Trips

City + Versailles + Giverny + Reims (Champagne) + Disneyland or Normandy

Seven days unlocks Paris and three day trips. Days 1-5 follow the 5-day itinerary. Day 6: Reims and the Champagne region (90 min by TGV) — visit Maisons (Moët, Veuve Clicquot), tasting tour, cathedral. Day 7: Disneyland Paris OR D-Day beaches (Normandy, full-day). The seven-day version is the comprehensive France introduction from Paris base.

A full week is enough to actually understand Paris. Three days for the major districts, three days for nearby regions, and one day for the offbeat neighborhoods most tourists miss. The back half of the trip is more about texture than checking landmarks — your photos get more diverse and you walk away with a three-dimensional sense of the city.

7-Day Total Budget at a Glance

Budget

$525

Per person, flights excl.

Recommended

Mid-Range

$1,120

Per person, flights excl.

Luxury

$2,410

Per person, flights excl.

Book Hotels & Flights for This Itinerary

Search Paris hotels and flights in one place. Trip.com offers competitive comparison rates.

Day-by-Day Detailed Schedule

DAY 1

Eiffel Tower, Seine, Champs-Élysées

Eiffel Tower · Trocadéro · Seine cruise · Arc de Triomphe

Activities

  1. 08:30 Trocadéro photo + breakfast at Café Carette 1-1.5 hours

    Start with the canonical Paris photo — Trocadéro plaza directly facing the Eiffel Tower. Café Carette (3 Place du Trocadéro) serves classic French breakfast with the tower in the window. Free photo viewpoint year-round

    Cost: Breakfast $20-30 / €18-28 TIP: Best morning light 7-9 AM. The plaza is free; arrive early to skip the tourist crush by 10 AM. Café Carette's pastry counter is the takeaway option for budget travelers.
  2. 10:00 Eiffel Tower (summit climb) 2-2.5 hours

    Built 1889 for the World Exposition. 324m, 1,665 steps to the top. Three observation levels — 57m (first), 115m (second), 276m (summit). The summit elevator is the headline experience. Book online 1-2 months ahead

    Cost: Summit $30 / €28; 2nd floor $20 / €18; stairs $10 / €11 TIP: Book online via the official Eiffel Tower website — without advance booking expect 2-3 hour queues. Choose the morning slot for the best light and shorter waits. The 'sparkle' light show runs on the hour from sundown to 1 AM.
  3. 13:00 Lunch — Champ de Mars picnic OR Le Petit Cler bistro 1.5 hours

    Champ de Mars (the park beneath the Eiffel Tower) is the picnic spot — grab a baguette + cheese + wine from Rue Cler market for $20 / €18. Or Le Petit Cler bistro for sit-down French classics

    Cost: $20-40 / €18-37 TIP: Rue Cler is a 5-min walk from the Eiffel Tower — a working-class pedestrian street with multiple food stalls. The picnic on Champ de Mars facing the tower is the classic Paris lunch.
  4. 15:00 Seine river cruise 1-1.5 hours

    1-hour boat from the Eiffel Tower or Pont Neuf piers. Pass under all the major bridges, see Notre-Dame from the water, Louvre, Musée d'Orsay, Île de la Cité. The most-photographed Paris perspective

    Cost: $20-30 / €18-28 TIP: Bateaux Mouches (Pont de l'Alma) and Vedettes du Pont Neuf are the major operators. The 'sunset' or 'twilight' cruise (after 8 PM) is the most-photogenic version. Pre-booking online saves 20%.
  5. 16:30 Champs-Élysées + Arc de Triomphe 2-2.5 hours

    1.9 km of grand avenue lined with luxury shops, theaters, and the iconic Arc de Triomphe (50m) at the western end. Climb the 280 spiral steps to the rooftop observation deck for the canonical view down 12 radiating boulevards

    Cost: Arc de Triomphe rooftop $16 / €15 TIP: Walk west-to-east from Place de la Concorde. The Arc de Triomphe rooftop is the daytime view; for sunset, the western side (looking down toward Place de la Concorde) is the iconic shot. Cross the underground passage — don't try to walk across the 12-way intersection.
  6. 19:30 Dinner — Bouillon Pigalle or Le Relais de l'Entrecôte 1.5-2 hours

    Casual Paris dinner. Bouillon Pigalle (9th arr.) for affordable French classics at $13-22; Le Relais de l'Entrecôte (multiple branches) for the iconic steak-frites single-dish format

    Cost: $30-55 / €28-50 TIP: Bouillon Pigalle: no reservations, queue 45 min weekday evenings. Le Relais de l'Entrecôte: no reservations, queue 30-60 min. Both are walk-in only.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Café Carette (Trocadéro)

16th arr. · $20-30 / €18-28

Classic French breakfast with the Eiffel Tower view. Pain au chocolat + café crème + fresh orange juice. The terrace tables face the tower.

Lunch

Champ de Mars picnic from Rue Cler

7th arr. · $20-40 / €18-37

Baguette + Camembert or Brie + saucisson + bottle of Côtes du Rhône from Rue Cler vendors. Picnic on Champ de Mars facing the Eiffel Tower.

Dinner

Bouillon Pigalle or Le Relais de l'Entrecôte

9th arr. or various · $30-55 / €28-50

Bouillon Pigalle for the iconic affordable French bistrot. Le Relais de l'Entrecôte for the single-dish steak-frites with Café de Paris sauce. Both are essential Paris food experiences.

Transit:

Hotel → Trocadéro: Metro Line 6 to Trocadéro. Trocadéro → Eiffel Tower: 10-min walk. Eiffel Tower → Champs-Élysées: Seine cruise drops near Concorde, then 5-min walk. Champs-Élysées → Bouillon Pigalle: Metro Line 12 to Pigalle (15 min). Paris Visite Pass at $45 / €42 for 3 days covers all Day 1-3 transit.

DAY 1 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $55 Mid $130 Luxury $295
DAY 2

Louvre, Notre-Dame, Le Marais

Louvre · Sainte-Chapelle · Notre-Dame · Le Marais

Activities

  1. 09:00 Louvre Museum (Mona Lisa + essentials) 3-4 hours

    The world's largest art museum — 380,000+ objects in 73,000 sqm. The Mona Lisa (Salle 711, Denon Wing), Venus de Milo, Winged Victory of Samothrace, Code of Hammurabi are the canonical highlights. The architecture (former royal palace) is itself a destination

    Cost: $23 / €22 (free first Sunday) TIP: Book online via the official Louvre website. The Sully Court entrance has shorter queues than the Pyramid. Mona Lisa room is busiest 11-2 PM — try 9:30 AM or after 4 PM. Skip-the-line tickets via Klook or Get Your Guide.
  2. 13:00 Lunch — Café Marly (Louvre courtyard) or Tuileries Garden 1.5 hours

    Café Marly is the Louvre courtyard café with covered terrace overlooking the I.M. Pei pyramid. Or walk to Tuileries Garden and grab a bistrot lunch at Le Saint-Régis

    Cost: $32-65 / €30-60 TIP: Reservations for Café Marly recommended. The Tuileries Garden has lakeside chairs ($1-2 / €1-2 fee) for picnic-style lunches. The Angelina café (228 Rue de Rivoli) is the hot-chocolate destination.
  3. 14:30 Sainte-Chapelle 45 min - 1 hour

    Built 1248. 13th-century Gothic chapel with the most-spectacular stained-glass interior in the world — 15 windows covering 615 sqm, depicting 1,113 biblical scenes. The upper chapel is the photo destination

    Cost: $13 / €12 entry TIP: Inside the Palais de Justice (security checkpoint at entrance). Photography permitted but no flash. The afternoon sun illuminates the windows differently than morning — both work. Combined ticket with Conciergerie at $20 / €18.
  4. 16:00 Notre-Dame Cathedral (exterior) 45 min - 1 hour

    Built 1163-1345. The 13th-century Gothic cathedral. Damaged in the 2019 fire and reopened December 2024. The exterior is the iconic photo from the Pont au Double or Pont Saint-Louis bridges

    Cost: Free exterior; interior $3 / €3 TIP: The cathedral is fully restored as of Dec 2024 — interior visits reopened. Reserve a time slot via the cathedral website. The exterior is photographed from across the Seine on the Île Saint-Louis side.
  5. 17:30 Le Marais walking 1.5-2 hours

    The 3rd-4th arrondissement. Edo-era stone-paved alleys (Rue des Rosiers, Place des Vosges, Rue des Francs-Bourgeois). The most-preserved medieval district in Paris. Boutique shopping, cafés, and the Picasso Museum cluster

    Cost: Free walking TIP: Place des Vosges (built 1612) is the historical centerpiece. Pause at Café Mariage Frères for tea, or Bofinger for traditional Alsatian. The Jewish quarter (Rue des Rosiers) has the L'As du Fallafel destination.
  6. 19:30 Dinner — Bistrot Paul Bert or L'As du Fallafel takeaway 1.5-2 hours

    Bistrot Paul Bert (11th arr.) for the textbook contemporary bistrot with the iconic Grand Marnier soufflé. Or L'As du Fallafel takeaway sandwich for the Marais street-food experience at $11 / €10

    Cost: $11-90 / €10-85 TIP: Bistrot Paul Bert needs 1-2 week reservations. L'As du Fallafel walk-in takeaway is the casual alternative — eat standing or on a Marais bench.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Du Pain et des Idées (Canal Saint-Martin)

10th arr. · $5-12 / €5-11

The pain des amis (signature sourdough) + escargot pistache + flat white. Walk along Canal Saint-Martin afterward. Closed weekends.

Lunch

Café Marly (Louvre courtyard) or Tuileries picnic

1st arr. · $25-65 / €23-60

Café Marly's covered terrace overlooks the I.M. Pei pyramid. Or buy a baguette + cheese at Place du Marché Saint-Honoré for a Tuileries Garden picnic.

Dinner

Bistrot Paul Bert or L'As du Fallafel

11th arr. or Le Marais · $11-90 / €10-85

Bistrot Paul Bert for the textbook bistrot dinner (book 1-2 weeks ahead). L'As du Fallafel for the iconic Marais sandwich at $11 / €10 — walk-in capable.

Transit:

Hotel → Louvre: Metro Line 1 to Palais Royal–Musée du Louvre. Louvre → Sainte-Chapelle: 15-min walk via Pont du Carrousel. Sainte-Chapelle → Notre-Dame: 5-min walk. Notre-Dame → Le Marais: 10-min walk via Pont au Double. Marais → Bistrot Paul Bert: Metro Line 8 to Faidherbe–Chaligny (15 min). Day 2 transit covered by Paris Visite Pass.

DAY 2 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $50 Mid $110 Luxury $285
DAY 3

Montmartre, Sacré-Cœur, Saint-Germain

Sacré-Cœur · Montmartre · Musée d'Orsay · Café de Flore

Activities

  1. 08:30 Montmartre walk (before crowds) 2 hours

    Walk up from Abbesses metro station (Line 12) through the cobblestone streets. The Place du Tertre (artists' square) and Sacré-Cœur Basilica are the destinations. Morning light is the only time the village isn't crushed with tourists

    Cost: Free walking TIP: Avoid the funicular tourist trap — the climb up Rue Foyatier (stairs) is the canonical approach. Skip the Place du Tertre painters who'll insist on sketching you for €40+. The actual art galleries are on Rue Lepic and Rue des Abbesses.
  2. 10:30 Sacré-Cœur Basilica + dome climb 1-1.5 hours

    Built 1875-1914. The Romano-Byzantine white-domed basilica atop Montmartre's 130m hill. Free entry to the basilica; €8 / $9 to climb the 300 steps up the dome for the highest panoramic Paris view

    Cost: Basilica free; dome $9 / €8 TIP: Dome closes 6:30 PM (summer) / 5 PM (winter). The view encompasses the entire Paris skyline including the Eiffel Tower (4km away) and Notre-Dame. Photography permitted on the dome.
  3. 12:30 Lunch — Le Consulat or Pink Mamma 1.5 hours

    Le Consulat (18 Rue Norvins) is the iconic pink corner café in Montmartre — featured in countless Paris postcards. Pink Mamma (Pigalle) is the Instagram-favorite contemporary alternative with a glass-roof rooftop

    Cost: $32-55 / €30-50 TIP: Le Consulat is tourist-priced but the location is the value. Pink Mamma needs reservations 2-4 weeks ahead — book via TheFork.
  4. 14:30 Musée d'Orsay 2-2.5 hours

    Built 1900 as a railway station, converted to a museum 1986. The world's largest collection of Impressionist and Post-Impressionist art. Monet, Renoir, Manet, Van Gogh, Degas, Cézanne. The Beaux-Arts railway-station architecture is itself the experience

    Cost: $18 / €17 entry TIP: Book online to skip queues. The 5th-floor Impressionist galleries are the headline collection — head straight there. The clock-tower view from the café on the same floor is the iconic photo.
  5. 17:00 Saint-Germain-des-Prés walking 1.5-2 hours

    The 6th arrondissement. Café de Flore, Les Deux Magots, Shakespeare and Company bookshop, Rue de Buci market street. The historic Left Bank intellectual quarter where Sartre, Hemingway, Camus held court. Walking-only district

    Cost: Free walking TIP: The Rue de Buci is the food street; the Saint-Sulpice Square has the iconic fountain; Le Bon Marché (the world's oldest department store, 1838) is the elegant shopping anchor.
  6. 19:30 Dinner — Le Comptoir du Relais or Bouillon Chartier 2-2.5 hours

    Le Comptoir du Relais (Saint-Germain) is chef Yves Camdeborde's iconic bistrot. The dinner tasting requires 2-3 month advance booking; lunch is walk-in capable. Bouillon Chartier (9th arr.) is the alternative classic bouillon

    Cost: $30-95 / €28-90 TIP: Le Comptoir du Relais lunch is walk-in. The L'Avant Comptoir (next door) is the standing wine bar variant. Bouillon Chartier needs no reservation, queue 45 min.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Coquelicot Montmartre (24 Rue des Abbesses)

Montmartre · $11-25 / €10-23

Classic Montmartre boulangerie-bistrot with the chocolate-croissant + espresso + fresh-squeezed orange juice trio. Quiet morning vibe before Sacré-Cœur.

Lunch

Le Consulat or Pink Mamma

Montmartre / Pigalle · $32-55 / €30-50

Le Consulat for the iconic pink-corner photo + standard French lunch. Pink Mamma for the Instagram-favorite glass-roof setting (reservations 2-4 weeks ahead).

Dinner

Le Comptoir du Relais or Bouillon Chartier

Saint-Germain or 9th arr. · $30-95 / €28-90

Le Comptoir du Relais for the iconic Camdeborde bistrot (lunch walk-in capable). Bouillon Chartier for the affordable historic 1896 bouillon experience.

Transit:

Hotel → Montmartre: Metro Line 12 to Abbesses, Exit 1. Montmartre → Musée d'Orsay: Metro Line 12 to Solférino (20 min). Musée d'Orsay → Saint-Germain: 15-min walk via Rue du Bac. Saint-Germain → Le Comptoir du Relais: 5-min walk. Day 3 transit covered by Paris Visite Pass.

DAY 3 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $45 Mid $110 Luxury $295
DAY 4

Versailles Palace & Gardens

Château · Hall of Mirrors · Gardens · Trianon

Activities

  1. 08:00 Paris → Versailles (RER C) 45 min

    RER C from Pont de l'Alma or Champ de Mars stations to Versailles Château–Rive Gauche (35-45 min). €4.10 / $4.40 each way. The cheapest direct option to the palace

    Cost: $4.40 / €4.10 each way TIP: Buy a return ticket at the station — the queue at Versailles for the return ticket is longer than the inbound. The RER C runs every 15 min. Versailles Château–Rive Gauche station is a 10-min walk from the palace gates.
  2. 09:00 Château de Versailles (palace tour) 2.5-3 hours

    Built 1661-1715 by Louis XIV. The Hall of Mirrors (73m long, 357 mirrors), King's State Apartments, Queen's State Apartments, the Royal Chapel. The seat of French monarchy until 1789. UNESCO World Heritage. The most-visited royal palace in the world

    Cost: $23 / €21 palace + gardens TIP: Book the timed-entry ticket online 1-2 weeks ahead — without it, expect 1-2 hour queues. The Passport ticket ($32 / €30) includes the palace + Trianon estates + gardens. Audio guide included in the standard ticket.
  3. 12:30 Lunch — La Flottille (Grand Canal) or palace café 1.5 hours

    La Flottille (on the Grand Canal in the Versailles gardens) is the on-site restaurant — classic French. Or the palace café for casual lunch. Take a 30-min break before the gardens

    Cost: $30-55 / €28-50 TIP: Reservations for La Flottille via the palace website. The palace café is walk-in. The gardens have multiple food kiosks for picnic-style.
  4. 14:00 Gardens of Versailles 2-2.5 hours

    800 hectares of gardens designed by André Le Nôtre. The Grand Canal, the Bassin de Latone, the Bassin d'Apollon. The Musical Gardens (April-October Saturdays-Sundays) feature the original Louis XIV fountain shows. The gardens are walking-intensive — 4-5 km loops

    Cost: Gardens free (except Musical Gardens days $14 / €13) TIP: Rent a bicycle ($8 / €7.50 for 2 hours) for the gardens — the loops are large. Or rent a rowboat on the Grand Canal ($14 / €13 for 30 min). The Musical Gardens days are the photogenic version.
  5. 16:30 Grand Trianon & Petit Trianon (optional) 1.5-2 hours

    The Trianon estates are at the far end of the gardens — Louis XIV's pink-marble Grand Trianon as a private retreat from court ceremony, and Marie-Antoinette's Petit Trianon estate where she famously played 'shepherdess.' The Hameau de la Reine (queen's hamlet) is the photogenic farm-village mock-up

    Cost: Included in Passport ticket ($32 / €30) TIP: 30-min walk from main palace; 15-min via the petit train ($9 / €8 round-trip). Hameau de la Reine (queen's hamlet) is the most-photographed Marie-Antoinette site.
  6. 19:00 Return to Paris + Dinner 1.5-2 hours

    RER C back to Paris, arrive 7:45-8:15 PM. Dinner in the Latin Quarter or Saint-Germain. The Le Comptoir du Relais L'Avant Comptoir wine bar is the casual closing

    Cost: $30-65 / €28-60 TIP: Arrive Paris by 8 PM for the Latin Quarter dinner. Au Pied de Cochon (Les Halles, 24h) is the late-night brasserie option. Pair with a glass of red wine.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel breakfast + Paris boulangerie pickup

Paris · $8-22 / €7-20

Substantial — Versailles day involves 15,000+ steps. Hotel buffet + a boulangerie pastry pickup for the train.

Lunch

La Flottille (Grand Canal) or palace café

Versailles · $30-55 / €28-50

La Flottille for the on-canal classic French dining experience. Palace café for the casual quick-stop. Picnic supplies from a Paris bakery work too.

Dinner

Le Comptoir du Relais L'Avant Comptoir wine bar

Saint-Germain · $30-65 / €28-60

L'Avant Comptoir standing wine bar for the casual end-of-day. Small plates, glass of red wine, watching Saint-Germain go by.

Transit:

Paris RER C → Versailles: 35-45 min, $4.40 / €4.10 each way. Buy return ticket at departure. Inside Versailles: walking + optional petit train ($9 / €8 round-trip for Trianon access). Bicycle rental ($8 / €7.50 for 2 hours) for gardens loops.

DAY 4 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $65 Mid $130 Luxury $240
DAY 5

Giverny (Monet's Gardens) OR Loire Valley Castles

Monet's garden · Water lilies · OR Château de Chambord

Activities

  1. 08:00 Choose: Giverny (1-day) OR Loire Valley (long-day) 8-12 hours

    Giverny (Monet's gardens, 1 hour northwest of Paris) is the easier and more iconic day trip. Loire Valley castles (Chambord, Chenonceau, Amboise, 2 hours southwest) is the deeper history experience requiring 9+ hours

    Cost: $55-150 / €50-140 TIP: Giverny is best April-October when the gardens are in bloom — closed November-March. Loire Valley works year-round but requires a guided tour or rental car. Both available via Klook and Get Your Guide.
  2. 09:00 (Giverny) Train to Giverny (via Vernon) 1 hour

    Direct SNCF train from Saint-Lazare to Vernon-Giverny station, 45 min, $20 / €18 each way. Shuttle bus or 5km bike ride from Vernon to Monet's house and gardens

    Cost: $20 / €18 each way TIP: Tickets via the SNCF Connect app. Vernon station has bike rental ($5 / €5 for the day) — the 5km ride to Giverny along the Seine is part of the experience.
  3. 10:30 (Giverny) Monet's House and Gardens 2-3 hours

    Where Monet lived 1883-1926 and painted the Water Lilies series. The pink-shuttered house, the famous Japanese bridge over the lily pond, the flower garden. Open April-October only. The most-photographed garden in France

    Cost: $13 / €12 TIP: Book online 1-2 weeks ahead. Best 9-10 AM (after opening) or after 4 PM (most tour buses gone). The Japanese bridge photo is the iconic shot.
  4. 13:30 (Giverny) Lunch — La Capucine or Hotel Baudy 1.5 hours

    Giverny restaurants are limited but charming. Hotel Baudy was the historic hotel where Monet, Cézanne, and Renoir stayed — now an open garden bistrot. La Capucine is the casual village option

    Cost: $25-50 / €23-47 TIP: Reservations for Hotel Baudy. The 'Cézanne table' on the terrace is the historical photo. Pair with a glass of Sancerre or local Normandy cider.
  5. 15:30 Musée des Impressionnismes Giverny 1.5 hours

    Across the road from Monet's house. Modern museum dedicated to Impressionism with rotating exhibits. The garden alone is worth the entry fee — designed in the Monet color-block style

    Cost: $11 / €10 TIP: Combined Monet + Museum ticket at $22 / €20 saves a few euros. The museum has a strong café for an afternoon coffee stop.
  6. 09:00 (Loire alt) Loire Valley guided tour from Paris 12 hours

    Full-day Loire Valley castle tour: Château de Chambord (1519, Italian Renaissance, the Marvel of French Châteaux), Château de Chenonceau (built across the river Cher), Château d'Amboise (Leonardo da Vinci's grave is at Clos Lucé nearby). 12+ hours total

    Cost: $130-180 / €120-170 TIP: Guided tours from Paris via Get Your Guide. Self-drive option requires car rental + 2h drive each way. Recommend the Chambord+Chenonceau combo as the photogenic essentials.
  7. 18:00 Return to Paris + Farewell dinner 2-2.5 hours

    Train back to Paris arrives 7:30-8:30 PM. Farewell Paris dinner. Save the splurge for tonight — Bistrot Paul Bert, Frenchie, or a Michelin lunch tasting

    Cost: $50-260 / €47-245 TIP: Reservations 1-3 weeks ahead. Frenchie or Bistrot Paul Bert for the contemporary bistrot. Guy Savoy / Alain Ducasse lunch tasting is the splurge.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Boulangerie pickup before train

Paris · $5-12 / €5-11

Pierre Hermé or any boulangerie near your hotel for a croissant + flat white + fresh-squeezed juice to-go. Eat on the platform or train.

Lunch

Hotel Baudy (Giverny) or Loire tour-included

Giverny or Loire · $25-60 / €23-55

Hotel Baudy in Giverny for the historic Impressionist hotel + garden bistrot. Loire tours usually include lunch.

Dinner

Farewell — Bistrot Paul Bert or Michelin lunch

Paris · $50-260 / €47-245

Bistrot Paul Bert for the textbook contemporary bistrot. Michelin lunch tasting (Guy Savoy, Alain Ducasse) at $215-315 if scheduled for Day 5 itself.

Transit:

Giverny: SNCF train Paris Saint-Lazare → Vernon-Giverny, 45 min, $20 / €18 each way. Bike rental at Vernon $5 / €5/day. Loire Valley: guided tour from Paris $130-180 / €120-170 including transport, lunch, and entries.

DAY 5 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $70 Mid $165 Luxury $400
DAY 6

Reims & Champagne Houses

TGV · Cathedral · Champagne tasting · Veuve Clicquot

Activities

  1. 07:30 Paris → Reims (TGV) 45 min

    TGV from Gare de l'Est to Reims-Centre, 45 min, €30-50 / $32-54 each way. The Champagne region capital — coronation site of 33 French kings and the world's premier sparkling wine production zone

    Cost: $32-54 / €30-50 each way TIP: Book TGV via SNCF Connect 1-2 weeks ahead — last-minute prices can hit €100. Reims-Centre station is a 10-min walk from the cathedral and the Champagne houses.
  2. 09:00 Reims Cathedral (Notre-Dame de Reims) 1-1.5 hours

    Built 1211-1275. UNESCO World Heritage. The coronation site of 33 French kings, including Charles VII (with Joan of Arc in 1429). Gothic facade with 2,300 statues. The Marc Chagall stained-glass windows in the apse are 20th-century additions

    Cost: Free entry TIP: The cathedral tower climb ($9 / €8, 250 steps) gives the city view. Reservations needed for the climb on weekends.
  3. 11:00 Champagne House tour — Veuve Clicquot or Moët & Chandon 2-2.5 hours

    Maison Veuve Clicquot (Madame Clicquot is one of the few women in Champagne history) or Moët & Chandon. Tours include the 20+ km of underground chalk cellars (created in Roman times for chalk quarrying, repurposed as wine storage in the 1700s). 90-min guided tour with tasting at the end

    Cost: $32-65 / €30-60 per person TIP: Book online 2-4 weeks ahead — popular slots sell out. The tour includes the cellar walk + 1-2 glasses of Champagne tasting. Some houses (Pommery, Mumm) have shorter tours at $20-30.
  4. 13:30 Lunch — Brasserie Le Boulingrin or Café du Palais 1.5 hours

    Reims is famous for the brasserie tradition. Brasserie Le Boulingrin (founded 1925) serves classic Champagne-region food — Champagne ham, Bordet boudin, Brie de Meaux. Café du Palais is the alternative on Place du Forum

    Cost: $32-65 / €30-60 TIP: Reservations recommended. Pair with a glass of local Champagne by the glass ($11-22 / €10-20). The Champagne ham 'jambon de Reims' is the regional specialty.
  5. 15:30 Second Champagne House tour OR Reims Walking 2 hours

    Optional second house tour (€20-30) — visit a smaller producer like Taittinger or Henri Abelé. Or walk Reims's pedestrian quarter, Place Royale, and the Foujita Chapel (a 1966 chapel decorated by Japanese artist Tsuguharu Foujita)

    Cost: $22-40 / €20-37 TIP: Walking is the calmer option after two house tours. The Foujita Chapel is the unexpected highlight — a small Japanese-influenced chapel.
  6. 18:00 Return to Paris + Dinner 1.5-2 hours

    TGV back to Gare de l'Est. By 8 PM you're in Paris. Casual dinner — wine bar (Le Baron Rouge), bistrot (Le Comptoir du Relais L'Avant Comptoir), or a relaxed brasserie

    Cost: $30-65 / €28-60 TIP: After a Champagne day, a wine bar or small plates is the right closer. Le Baron Rouge (12th arr.) is the working-class wine bar option.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Gare de l'Est café before TGV

Paris · $8-15 / €7-14

Paul Bakery or any of the station cafés for croissant + flat white + fresh-squeezed juice. Pack a snack for the train.

Lunch

Brasserie Le Boulingrin or Café du Palais (Reims)

Reims · $32-65 / €30-60

Brasserie Le Boulingrin for the historic Champagne brasserie experience. Café du Palais for the open-terrace alternative. Champagne ham is the regional specialty.

Dinner

Le Baron Rouge or wine bar

Paris · $30-65 / €28-60

Le Baron Rouge wine bar for the casual closing — small plates, wine by the glass, Aligre market neighborhood. After a Champagne day, light dinner is right.

Transit:

Paris Gare de l'Est → Reims-Centre: TGV 45 min, $32-54 / €30-50 each way. Book 1-2 weeks ahead. Inside Reims: walking is the move — cathedral + Champagne houses are 10-15 min apart. Bike rental at the station for the longer routes.

DAY 6 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $110 Mid $215 Luxury $365
DAY 7

Disneyland Paris OR Normandy D-Day Beaches

Magic Kingdom OR Omaha Beach + Mont Saint-Michel

Activities

  1. 07:30 Choose: Disneyland Paris OR Normandy D-Day 8-12 hours

    Disneyland Paris (1992, 32 km east of Paris, 40 min RER A): family-friendly theme park day. Normandy D-Day (Omaha Beach, Pointe du Hoc, Mont Saint-Michel, 2.5 hours west by guided tour): WWII history + UNESCO landmark, 12-hour day

    Cost: $120-220 / €110-205 TIP: Disneyland: 40-min RER A from central Paris to Marne-la-Vallée Chessy. Day pass at €70-90 / $75-97. Normandy: guided tours from Paris $150-220 / €140-205. Mont Saint-Michel is the photogenic destination; the D-Day beaches are the historical depth.
  2. 09:30 (Disneyland) Disneyland Paris — main parks 8-10 hours

    Disneyland Park (the original) + Walt Disney Studios Park. Big Thunder Mountain Railroad, Phantom Manor, It's a Small World are the classics. The 'Frontierland' western theme is uniquely Disneyland Paris. The Marvel Avengers Campus opened 2022 in the Walt Disney Studios side

    Cost: 1-park 1-day $70-90 / €65-85; 2-park $100-130 / €95-120 TIP: Reserve online via the Disney website 1-2 weeks ahead — same-day sells out on weekends and during European school holidays. The Premier Access (fastpass equivalent) adds $13-22 / €12-20 per ride for skipping lines.
  3. 09:30 (Normandy) Normandy D-Day Beaches guided tour 12 hours

    Most travelers book a 12-hour guided van tour from Paris. Visits Omaha Beach, Pointe du Hoc (where US Rangers climbed the cliffs on D-Day), the American Cemetery (9,388 graves), and Sainte-Mère-Église (where US paratroopers landed on church steeple — the famous Red Buttons photo)

    Cost: $150-220 / €140-205 TIP: Tours via Get Your Guide and Viator. Recommended: smaller-group (8-12 people) for the personal experience. Stop at a Norman countryside restaurant for lunch — Camembert cheese, Calvados apple brandy.
  4. 14:00 (Normandy) Mont Saint-Michel (continued in some tours) 3 hours

    Some Normandy tours include the UNESCO Mont Saint-Michel — a small island commune with a Benedictine abbey topping the rocky outcrop, surrounded by tidal flats. Photographed at low tide and high tide for completely different effects

    Cost: Included in tour or $14 / €13 entry TIP: Mont Saint-Michel tours typically combine with D-Day for 14-hour days. Single-destination Mont Saint-Michel tours are 12 hours. The abbey climb is worth it — climb to the top platform for the view across the tidal flats.
  5. 20:00 Return to Paris + Final dinner 2 hours

    Both options return to Paris 8-9 PM. Final Paris dinner — the closing bistrot, Michelin lunch tasting if planned earlier, or a final wine-bar evening

    Cost: $45-300 / €42-280 TIP: Bistrot Paul Bert, Frenchie, or Le Comptoir du Relais for the textbook bistrot. Wine bar at Septime La Cave is the casual closing. Pack tonight — final flight tomorrow.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Pierre Hermé or Du Pain et des Idées

Paris · $5-12 / €5-11

Pierre Hermé Ispahan croissant + flat white. Du Pain et des Idées escargot pistache + sourdough. The two best boulangerie experiences in Paris.

Lunch

Disneyland food court OR Norman countryside restaurant

Day trip location · $15-50 / €14-47

Disneyland: Walt's Restaurant (in-park, table service) or the Plaza Gardens (buffet). Normandy: tour-included lunch at a countryside restaurant — Camembert cheese, Calvados apple brandy, cider.

Dinner

Farewell Paris — Bistrot Paul Bert or wine bar

Paris · $45-300 / €42-280

Bistrot Paul Bert for the textbook contemporary bistrot with the Grand Marnier soufflé closer. Frenchie or Le Comptoir du Relais for the modern alternative. Wine bar at Septime La Cave for the casual closer.

Transit:

Disneyland Paris: RER A from central Paris to Marne-la-Vallée Chessy, 40 min, $4.40 / €4.10 each way. Multi-day pass options. Normandy: guided tour $150-220 / €140-205 round-trip including transport, lunch, entries.

DAY 7 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $130 Mid $260 Luxury $530

Book Paris Tours & Tickets

Packing Checklist

Paris 7-Day Itinerary FAQ

Is Disneyland Paris worth it for adults?
It is if you're a Disney fan or you have kids. The 'Frontierland' western theme and the Sleeping Beauty Castle are uniquely Disneyland Paris. For pure adventure rides, US Universal parks have stronger thrill rides. For Disney's storytelling, Tokyo Disneyland is more meticulous. Disneyland Paris is the European Disney option — best for families with children 5-15.
Champagne or Normandy for Day 7?
Champagne (Reims) if you want the wine experience — 5-6 hour day trip. Normandy if you want WWII history and Mont Saint-Michel — 12-hour day trip. Different vibes. Champagne is half-day-relaxed; Normandy is full-day-emotional.
Should I add Provence or Côte d'Azur in 7 days?
No — they require flights (1-2 hours) and 3+ day commitments. The Paris-base 7-day model with day trips (Versailles, Giverny, Reims, Disneyland/Normandy) maximizes Paris as the anchor. For Provence or Côte d'Azur, extend to 10-14 days.
Is the TGV worth it?
Yes for distances 100km+. TGV at 320 km/h covers Paris-Reims in 45 min (vs 90 min by car), Paris-Lyon in 2 hours, Paris-Marseille in 3.5 hours. Book 1-2 weeks ahead for prices €30-80 / $32-86 each way; same-day prices can hit €100-200.
What's the total cost of 7 days?
Excluding flights and hotel: budget $525 ($75/day), mid-range $1,120 ($160/day), luxury $2,410 ($344/day). Add hotels: 7 nights mid-range $840-1,400, 7 nights luxury $2,100-3,500. The 7-day Paris-plus-day-trips model is the comprehensive France-from-Paris experience.

Looking for Different Trip Lengths?

Why you can trust 7-day itinerary

Jimmy Kong TripPick founder · Travel content creator

Based in Chiang Mai for 8+ years, with 30+ countries visited across Southeast Asia, Japan, and Europe. Every detail in this guide is primary-source verified as of April 2026, with prices auto-refreshed via live exchange rate APIs. This isn't AI-generated boilerplate — it's written from the perspective of someone who has actually been there.

8+ years analyzing travel data 30+ countries visited Live exchange rate verified
📅 Published: 🔄 Last updated: